Showing posts with label World War II stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World War II stories. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 March 2016

WWII Telegrams Mysteriously appear on Bermondsey Archway!

Messages from wartime Britain have been pasted onto the wall of an archway in SE London! The telegrams reveal the moving stories of  loss and survival by Bermondsey residents during the Blitz, as they informed relatives of the death of loved ones, the location of evacuees, and their survival despite the bombing raids.

Air raids were widely reported by newspapers during WWII and closely followed by the Home Front. Bermondsey was amongst the most severely bombed areas in Britain.  Several hundred civilians were killed and thousands were injured.

Why were the telegrams, believed to be copies, placed on the archway? Is the location, the arches between Tanner Street and Maltby Street, important?  Is this a memorial? As yet, there is no explanation. If you have any information about this, you can email joey@southwarknews.co.uk.

Source
www.southwarknews.co.uk
http://southwark.gov.uk/info/200159/history.
#WWII   #Bermondsey  #WWIIBermondsey #WWIIsouthwark

Friday, 19 June 2015

TODDINGTON STATION, COLOSSUS AND THE BLETCHLEY PARK ENGINEER#

During a journey, on a steam train from Winchcombe to Toddington Station, I met David who told me, "I was at Bletchley Park#." Working with Bill Tutt and Tommy Flowers, he helped build Colossus# which was used for intercepting messages to German High Command and Hitler's instructions to his generals! David said his work involved wiring and installing plates. "My job was to keep Colossus going," David said, "we worked on it while it was live - 350 volts - you could get a shock!" "We worked with one hand in our pockets, because if you worked on two different parts of the machine, the current could go straight through you." After WWII, David continued his top secret work with GCHQ.

Considered to be the first version of a program controlled computer, Colossus was developed at a Post Office Research Station (GPO) and was moved to Bletchley Park in December 1943.  By January/February 1944 it was operational and working around the clock to decode German transmissions, and provide Britain with crucial information. It also confirmed that false information about Britain's invasion plans and tactics, a deliberate decoy, had been believed by Germany. Eventually there were ten machines at Bletchley Park!

The interception of the German Lorenze# SZ-40 cipher machine transmissions (tunny) led to the success of the D Day invasion, and the shortening of the war saving countless lives. This is a remarkable story and the work of David and the Bletchley Park Engineers has never fully received the acknowledgement it deserves.


Source
The Secret Life of Bletchley Park   Sinclair McKay
Station X   Michael Smith
The Colossus its Purpose.. Tony Sale  www.codesandcyphers.org.uk.lorenz/colossus
The Colossus Gallery  www.tnmoc.org/explore/colossus-gallery
Colossus   http://cryptomuseum.com/crypto/colossus/index.htm

Monday, 27 April 2015

Toddington Steam Railway - Wartime in the Cotswolds April 2015

The sound of steam trains and air raid sirens filled the air at #Toddington Steam Railway station and the re-enactors turned up and turned back time to re-create the sights of the 1940's.


 There was also an ARP Post and 1940's beauty salon and Colwell Art Jazz Ensemble put us "In The Mood" with Glen Miller's big band sound.  A marquee provided a popular shopping opportunity, with many stalls dedicated to 1940s fashion and memorabilia.

At Winchcombe Station the activities continued with an Air Raid Shelter display and the Worcestershire Home Guard keeping an eye on the proceedings, checking and stamping WWII ID cards!

With rides on the steam trains, exhibitions, events and re-enactments at the four stations that make up the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway, and also a  fly past from a Spitfire on Sunday, Toddington was a great start to the re-enactment season!

What made it even more special was my chance encounter with a Bletchley Park Veteran!  During a journey from Winchcombe to Toddington, I met David who was at Bletchley Park during WWII. Together with engineer Tommy Flowers, David worked on  Colossus, used to decrypt the Lorenze messages used by German High Command. Many consider this to be the start of the computer age. "It was my job to keep Colossus going", David told me. I shall be returning to this story, later in more depth- such an interesting piece of history, and an amazing coincidence!

Thursday, 26 March 2015

FOOD FOR THOUGHT - RATIONING AND THE HOMEFRONT

Food was an issue in WWII! Merchant ships from America laden with food and supplies were being attacked by German U boats, and the Royal Navy protecting these convoys was suffering severe losses. Occupied Europe could not provide the imports we needed! Food was in short supply, and rationing had to be introduced!

In 1940, British experts from the world of food science gathered to share their thoughts and expertise. In a series of lectures, later published as "a book of national importance", Lord Woolton, Minister for Food assessed their findings.  They all agreed on the importance of protective foods - milk, cheese, wholemeal bread or grains, vegetables and potatoes and also the urgent need for increasing the nation's food production. A healthy workforce and fighting force was essential to the defence of our island nation!
In wartime Britain rations for one adult, for one week included,
  • 4 oz bacon or ham
  • 2 oz butter
  • 2oz cheese
  • 3 pints of milk, sometimes 2 pints (skimmed or dried milk was available each month)
  • 8oz sugar
  • 1 shell egg
  • 2oz tea
  • 2oz margarine and 2oz cooking fat
  • A monthly points system also allowed for a tin of fish or meat or 2lb dried fruit.
Many housewives also involved with war work, now had to provide nutritious meals from rations, at least from the rations that were available, and keep their families well fed.
Britain responded to these challenges. Home Economists gave demonstrations in markets and large shops to show hard pressed housewives and mothers how to provide nourishing meals for their families. Canteens and restaurants were created in the factories, for workers, to ensure a healthy diet was available.
 
 The Women's Voluntary Service provided food for bomb victims, and in some air raid shelters provided hot drinks and snacks. The Women's Institute set to work preserving
and canning large quantities of fruit and making jam for distribution.  The Women's Land Army took on men's work on the farms to ensure food production continued, and every available space, parks, gardens or flowerbeds were used for growing food. Winston Churchill succeeded in keeping morale high with his "Dig for Victory" and "Grow your Own" campaign, but it was also the determination of the British people that ensured that our island nation avoided being starved into submission!

Source
The Nation's Larder and the Housewife's Part therein  - A Set of Lectures delivered at the Royal Institution of Great Britain, in April, May, June 1940. Published by G Bell and Sons, Ltd, 1940.*
Manpower - The Story Of Britain's Mobilisation For War Ministry of Labour and National Service by the Ministry of Information 1944
We'll Eat Again by Marguerite Patten In Association With The Imperial War Museum

*from Mike's Militaria, 3, Worcester Street, Wolverhampton, West Midlands WV2 4LD, 07951 262629, Evenings 01922 479557. (Military items bought and sold.)

Friday, 17 October 2014

WWII, Coventry,and the Blitz

 

 

In the summer of 1940, and until the spring of 1941, Germany began their relentless aerial attacks, targeting British cities, ports and industrial areas. During November a devastating raid levelled the centre of Coventry leaving the city's cathedral in ruins. 

Roy from Northamptonshire, a small boy at the time, was in Coventry visiting relatives.  "My Uncle held me up to the window to see the glow from Coventry while it was being bombed in 1940."  "I had to spend the night in an Anderson shelter, it was the first and only time!

 

Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Welcome to 1940′s Picture Post!

The Picture Post will be publishing your WW2 stories, reporting events and bringing you photo's, interviews in fact anything and everything connected with the 1940's!

Your Stories from Bantock House War Weekend

It was a great weekend with lots of visitors, re-enactors, events and exhibitions!  But the main reason I wanted to write this blog was to share your stories. So here goes.
John Harris was a young boy during World War 2.  He lived in Walsall with his grandparents, parents and brother. Whilst he and his brother were busy working in the garden  (their job was to keep the Anderson shelter covered with soil and grass)  they noticed a man at the back of the garden tying ariel wire to a tree.  Because the need for security had been drummed into them he told his mother about this who then told the local ARP warden Mr. Reeve, who was also the local chemist and had a shop at the top of the road.  “I thought he was probably a spy,” said John, ”it turned out that he was a listener, a voluntary interceptor, who was visited by an army despatch rider.
Thought this was a very interesting story because we are only just beginning to find out more about the UK’s network of voluntary interceptors, who listened into german transmissions and sent the information to Bletchley Park, often using despatch riders.
Bantock House War Weekend also featured an exhibition about Geoff Hanley who was a radio technician in World War One and a Voluntary Interceptor from 1940 -1944.  Harry Platt, who told me that Geoff had his own transmitter and mast, was also a member of this group of amateur radio hams. Harry said,”everyone made their own wirelesses called  ’breadboards’.
Another visitor to Bantock House Museum was veteran Geoffrey Ensor, who served on HMS Jason, and was a Leutenant in the RNV Reserve.  Geoffrey was at the Normandy landings, serving on the landing crafts and transferring troops onto the Normandy beaches.
Thanks to everyone who took time to talk to me at what was a very busy and successful event, and apologies to the re-enactors Karen and co and The Scallywags for not yet posting photos. A temporary gliche I hope!

TV, DVD and FILM

World War II in Colour is currently being screened at 7.OO pm, Fridays on Channel 5. This series started Friday 12th September, so if you missed the first episode they’re all on You Tube!

War Weekend


It’s World War Weekend at Bantock House Museum, Wolverhampton, West Midlands, on Saturday 6th and Sunday 7th September and entrance is free.  The theme is communication and includes a profile of radio spy Geoff Hanley who was a voluntary interceptor, and the role of Bantock house as an army communications centre during the Second World War.  There are also displays and re-enactments and an exhibition featuring the work of war correspondent Ernie Pyle, and  some moving letters written by soldiers during the First World War.

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